Vote for the British National Party Lions in the 2009 European Elections

BROWN BRITAIN DAY

June 6, 2008 by Chairman              Print Page Print Page            Email Page Email Page


G. K. Chesterton once wrote a poem, Geography, in which he attacked the hyper-imperialism of his day, when the Establishment seemed to believe that the entire world was there for the financial benefit of the Masters of Victorian Britain.

On the day that it has been announced that Gordon Brown is kindly giving us an extra Bank Holiday, Britain Day, on which we are all commanded to eat (not too much, and no fatty or culturally exclusive bacon butties), drink (but no alcohol, because it might offend you-know-who and, anyway it’s bad for you unless you’re an MP) and be merry (as long as you’ve paid for a licence at the local council office), Nick Griffin has rewritten and updated Chesterton’s ditty:

BROWN BRITAIN DAY
Brown Britain’s a place where the world can be found,
The scum of the earth come here, benefits-bound;
They get it all free while poor you and me pay –
And that is the meaning of Brown Britain Day.

They push drugs, plot mayhem, turn girls into whores
While the police fill in forms and cower safe indoors.
And the courts just slap wrists for knives, cleavers and axes,
The State will do nothing – except take our taxes.

In schools and in playgrounds the story’s the same –
The white kids, the English, are always to blame.
When a suicide bomber blows up on a bus
The finger of blame it gets pointed at us.

Our principal imports we once made ourselves,
Now foreign-made products pile high on the shelves.
But we’ve run out of money, though let us give thanks –
Brown took it all off us to prop up the Banks.
For financiers swim while old pensioners sink,
Ignored in a sea of freezing red ink.
The guilty get handouts, while families pay
And that is the meaning of Brown Britain Day.

Our principal exports are harder to say,
Though our jobs have been packaged and shipped to Bombay,
And steel mills and factories that once paid for our feast
Are dismantled and crated and shipped to the East.
So the natives escape to Australia or Spain
Unable to cope with the taxes or pain
Of losing their country and having to pay
And that is the meaning of Brown Britain Day.

The Day of St. George is an absolute ‘no’ –
It might offend Muslims, that Cross has to go.
The Day of Trafalgar won’t do – no great wrench,
For remembering Nelson might upset the French.
But one day in August won’t make us forget
That the people who pay all have not spoken yet,
And we’ll not be fooled by Brown Britain Day,
Rather work for the time when we flush it away!

The original poem. One of Chesterton’s ‘Songs of Education’, can be found here



Share this page:


If you enjoyed or were affected by this article, please help us to continue making a difference...

Make a Difference - Make a Donation! Get Active - Join the Quiet Revolution!



Righteous anger & political action:

The British National Party believes in telling the truth, even if it is sometimes uncomfortable to hear or offensive to those who would rather bury their heads in the sand than face real problems in our society. But while we often pass quite critical comment on the impact of immigration, multi-culturalism and alien religions on the indigenous people of our lands, we have no animosity towards immigrants, their descendants or the followers of non-native religions. Nor do we intend to encourage others to feel such animosity, or believe that anything we have to say is likely to 'stir up hatred' against anyone.

In fact, we believe that by providing a peaceful and Constitutional outlet for the anger and the frustration felt by millions of our people over the undemocratic transformation of our country by our political masters, the BNP actually defuses tensions. Where there is 'hate' we seek to turn it into righteous anger and political action against the only people who deserve to be hated - the politicians who use our taxes to turn our country into a place where we often feel like strangers in our own land.

Comments

30 Responses to “BROWN BRITAIN DAY”

  1. White Rose on June 6th, 2008 11:09 pm

    Perhaps if Gordon Brown had been called Gordon White he wouldn’t be such a Mugabe-vile.

  2. Mister J on June 6th, 2008 11:29 pm

    They should make Trafalgar Day a holiday. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trafalgar_Day

    Seen this about Caroline Spelman? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7441360.stm

    Here’s some verse about our political “leaders”.

    The Pigs’ Tale

    The Westminster swine
    Wine and dine
    With snouts in trough
    They sup and scoff
    At the plebs who provide their swill
    And pay their huge expenses bill.

    They hope that none will pry
    Into their immense pig sty
    And wink with knowing smiles
    At Speaker Martin’s vast air miles.
    Yes, pigs do fly and squeal with delight
    When they win on election night.

    Traitors’ porkies we have heard
    Spin and lies, all absurd.
    Boars and sows, the taxpayer weeps
    Why do we vote for these greedy creeps?
    Perhaps there’ll be occasional squealers
    Who’ll tell their stories to the Peelers.

    New Lieboar and the Cons
    Oink and bow to the Right DisHons.
    Corrupt abuse of public funds
    Backhanders, bribes and juicy bungs
    This cesspit makes such a stink
    Why are some members not in Clink?

  3. draygalore on June 6th, 2008 11:46 pm

    That is top hammer Mr Griffin.
    No holds barred,straight for the political jugular.
    Let the evil communists attempt to deny a single line of your excellent prose!

  4. Noel on June 7th, 2008 1:33 am

    Thanks ever so much Nick. I thoroughly enjoyed reading that. Indeed I was sorry to reach the end of it but it pretty well says it all as it stands.

    I hope you’ll still be able to find time for such things, now and again, when you’re Prime Minister of an independent, self-governing, self-sufficient, well-defended and happily free Britain.

    Put in on a BNP leaflet please.

  5. Phil Williams on June 7th, 2008 3:16 am

    “In schools and playgrounds the story’s the same - The white kids,the English are always to blame”

    This is not untrue, our children are being taught to feel guilty about who they are. They are being told that there is no such thing as British culture in schools. They are singled out if they have a different opinion from what is being dictated to them. During so called “debates” they are excluded from participation if they do not conform. Very often punished for disrupting the class with their views and comments, these same views are just the same as ones which would of been commended only a generation or so ago.

  6. ianpenrhyndd on June 7th, 2008 6:47 am

    May I respectfully say that after the poem it should mention, “We must work together”.

    At present there is a problem for we, to solve it we must all vote BNP!

    London bi-elections coming up.

  7. liebouroutnow on June 7th, 2008 8:20 am

    Great stuff! Never were truer words written. It seems that there is no end to Mr Griffin’s talents - not only is he an accomplished historian, articulate speaker, skilled politician and fine leader, he also possesses the poetic muse. Liblabcon should be green with envy considering the idiots they’ve got.

  8. SheriffofNottingham on June 7th, 2008 9:30 am

    Hooray for Nick Griffin who says it all plain
    That the Britain we knew has gone down the drain;
    Our life is a joke with the punch line astray -
    That is the meaning of Brown Britain Day.
    The colour of life has changed to dull brown,
    The smile and the laughter to a whine and a frown.
    We can’t fly our flags; we can’t have our pork;
    We can’t have a laugh; we can’t even talk.
    We pay through the nose to get out and away
    Just to sit in a jam all Brown Britain Day.

  9. Mandala on June 7th, 2008 9:36 am

    Nice one, Nick. You ought to start writing songs :)

  10. Despairing Dan on June 7th, 2008 10:07 am

    Brilliant Nick. And sadly all true!

  11. White Rose on June 7th, 2008 10:31 am

    Surely everone knows our Nick is a super talented wordsmith. Click on LINKS (top of page) and GREAT WHITE RECORDS and WESTWIND for demos of just a few of the songs Nick has penned. It is his lyrical tongue, driven by inner conviction, which makes him such a great speaker at venues and such an asset to the BNP. He sees it, and tells it, as it is. More power to your elbow, Mister Griffin, keep ‘em coming.

    Can we all have a go … ??

    Mr Griffin knows how to sing it,
    Labour too concerned with how to bin it,
    We all know ‘cos we all sin it,
    Lib/Lab/Con’s so out of tune, in it?

  12. Stringbag on June 7th, 2008 10:43 am

    Excellent! - ridicule is a very powerful weapon and they don’t come any more ridiculous than Gordon Brown:

    “Our principal imports we once made ourselves……..Our principal exports are harder to say…….”

    Well yes, quite:

    “So what is Britain good at? Where does the UK fit in this world of changing economic geography, in which nations will increasingly concentrate on the things they do best? The answer is simple. We count the money and we do the bulls..t.”

    http://books.guardian.co.uk/extracts/story/0,,2082838,00.html

  13. Gamlegorm The White on June 7th, 2008 10:44 am

    I thought a lengthy poem
    I thought it very quick
    I thought a lengthy poem
    And all whom read it; thought I’m thick

    I thought a lengthy poem
    And shortened it a bit
    I used some simple words
    To describe the poem and the contents of it

    Upon completion of the poem
    I put it in a book
    And several pages later wrote
    ‘The preceding pages are words I can not think of’

    The blank pages stayed a little while
    My thoughts remained the same
    But those that read the poem
    Could not; understand the style.

    I can think of many word’s to describe what I think of Brown’s Britain and Brown himself the list would endless but I cannot for the life of me understand the mans mentality!

    Nick Griffin’s poem ‘Brown Britain Day ‘is spot on and well written. It makes more sense than my poem above but mine is the result of banging my head against the wall in despair for years.

  14. Winston on June 7th, 2008 11:01 am

    When is this ‘all inclusive’ Britain Day (the EU will like that not) going to be? Armistice Day (my favourite) or Christmas Eve (no chance) or New Year’s Eve (possibly) would all be good. You just know the date they choose will be a diversity disaster. I’m assuming of course that 23rd April is absolutely off limits for the Common Purposes of ‘community cohesion’.

    I can see a convenient all singing etc, Islamic Britain Day on the cards here. When was Mo born - when did it die? When did it marry Aisha etc? They’ll try to slip something Islamic into Brown Britain Day, that’s for sure while making it as pointless as possible for indigenous Brits. I still fancy Christmas Eve first and New Year’s Eve second - in my dreams. I always use to book St George’s Day off anyway if 23rd April fell on a working Day. Great article by Nick and all despairingly true.

  15. Littlewhiteboy on June 7th, 2008 11:05 am

    What about “Oak Apple Day” ( also known as “Pinch Bum Day”) ?

    That’s my kind of holiday.

  16. Littlewhiteboy on June 7th, 2008 11:10 am

    Here’s my contribution. I’ve been waiting for a chance to post it.

    The English soil is deep and brown and filled with English dead.
    Viking, Saxon, Norman, Jute and Celt with hair of red.
    And in this soil we grow the wheat from which we make our bread.
    With every slice, with every bite you taste the English dead.

    Chorus : Oh English bread is firm and fine yeasty white and nice
    Rise up once more you English dough, do not give up the fight.

    But now a dark foreboding cloud has settled on our land.
    For foreign bread can now be found where once proud buns did stand.
    Pitta, rye and pumpernickel, baguette, chapati, nan.
    Our ancestors would weep fore sure to see them in our hands.

    (repeat chorus and have a beer).

    -
    Thanks, EB. I love it (’specially as I bake all my own bread with English flour!)-Ed

  17. SheriffofNottingham on June 7th, 2008 12:14 pm

    @ Littlewhiteboy

    I second Ed’s comment. I found the last line of the first verse especially moving.

    Sheriff, please check your e-mail (including the spam), it is genuine. - Ed.

  18. Artorius on June 7th, 2008 12:22 pm

    AMAZING ANTI-DHIMMITUDE FROM THE C of E:

    Church attacks Labour for betraying Christians:

    “The policies of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have helped to generate a spiritual, civic and economic crisis in Britain, according to an important Church of England report.

    Labour is failing society and lacks the vision to restore a sense of British identity, the report says in the Church’s strongest attack on the Government for decades. It accuses the Government of “deep religious illiteracy” and of having “no convincing moral direction.”

    The report, commissioned for the Church of England and to be published on Monday, accuses the Government of discriminating against the Christian Churches in favour of other faiths, including Islam.

    More at:

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article4083979.ece


    ‘Deep religious illiteracy’ certainly applies to this government; they simply do not understand the enemy, because they live in a one-size-fits-all universe and they hold all religion in equal contempt. - Ed.

    ARTORIUS please check your e-mail (including the spam), it is genuine. - Ed.

  19. ralf on June 7th, 2008 2:52 pm

    This analysis of the Islamic problem is worth watching:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg1Zs0a3CHs&feature=related
    Ralph

  20. Mr.k on June 7th, 2008 3:39 pm

    Brown may give us a Britain day, but not only will the BNP do that, they will give us St George’s day, St Andrew’s day, St David’s day, and possibly St Piran’s day for the Cornish…anyhow they will have our national days properly celebrated!


    Indeed.
    - Ed.

  21. redwhite@cross on June 7th, 2008 4:07 pm

    “they live in a one-size-fits-all universe and they hold all religion in equal contempt. - Ed.”

    http://deletefrance.blogspot.com/2008/06/marxist-progressive-revolution-with.html

  22. wokingham on June 7th, 2008 5:03 pm

    Hi Nick….looks like you’ve started something….you’ve brought out all the poets in the Party…:-) Cheers…nice one…

  23. Herbert Thornton on June 7th, 2008 6:28 pm

    Then and now.

    This royal throne of kings, this scepter’d isle,
    This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
    This other Eden, demi-paradise,
    This fortress built by Nature for herself
    Against infection and the hand of war,
    This happy breed of men, this little world,
    This precious stone set in the silver sea,
    Which serves it in the office of a wall,
    Or as a moat defensive to a house,
    Against the envy of less happier lands,
    This blessed plot, this earth, this realm,

    This England,

    Where is it now?
    This precious realm, this world,
    This other Eden, this demi-paradise,
    Once guarded by the sea,
    Now joined with lesser lands.
    Her once colossal breed of men,
    Beset with others, infected by their plagues?
    Ponder this and think of Ozymandias.

  24. PJD on June 7th, 2008 6:57 pm

    As a Celt I’d like to express my appreciation of our Chairman’s wit, erudition and play on words in this piece. And similar to those who have followed with their own verses. In Ireland, poets were often respected out of the fear that they would write something to ridicule people, however subtly. Mockery of the ludicrous gang which claims to govern GB is a powerful weapon in the fight against the evil that is overtaking our country.

  25. RW on June 7th, 2008 9:42 pm

    @ Herbert Thornton — many people don’t realise the ‘blessed plot’ speech is incomplete, and includes a lament not unlike what applies today:–

    This land of such dear souls, this dear dear land,
    Dear for her reputation through the world,
    Is now leased out, I die pronouncing it,
    Like to a tenement or pelting farm:
    England, bound in with the triumphant sea,
    Whose rocky shore beats back the envious siege
    Of watery Neptune, is now bound in with shame,
    With inky blots and rotten parchment bonds:
    That England, that was wont to conquer others,
    Hath made a shameful conquest of itself.

  26. EnglandxChick on June 7th, 2008 11:07 pm

    Why do lousy unelected MPs get the final say or any say for that matter on which day will be a bank holiday…

    The only choice the white majority would choose is St George’s day. Most days of the year don’t have any meaning to anyone but that day would.

    When the days arrives that we will finally and rightfully so be able to mark St Georges day with a bank holiday. There should be celebration all over the country. The st Georges’s ‘cross’ should be put up everywhere, even religious buildings and I don’t just mean churches. There should be parties and lots of alcohol. I am sure that the british indiginous population would be only too happy to celebrate. But MPs and those people living in this country who want to destroy our way of life should have no part in St Georges day.

  27. Askari on June 8th, 2008 1:33 am

    24TH MAY - EMPIRE DAY….for Queen and Country!
    This now forgotten public holiday once mattered very much. In my family, born across the seas in Empire, and with a grandfather who’s birthday fell on this holiday, it was an important holiday. Of course, if Britain Day were to be celebrated on this day, it whould be like sprinkling the entire Regime with Holy Water:- the entire tyranny would shrivel up with a hiss and burn to cinders.
    I quote the following entry http://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/England-History/EmpireDay.htm

    The very idea of a day that would …“remind children that they formed part of the British Empire, and that they might think with others in lands across the sea, what it meant to be sons and daughters of such a glorious Empire.”, and that “The strength of the Empire depended upon them, and they must never forget it.”, had been considered as early as 1897. The image of a motherly Queen Victoria, Empress of India, as its paramount ruler would be shared by an Empire spanning almost a quarter of the entire globe.

    However it was not until after the death of Queen Victoria, who died on 22 January 1901, that Empire Day was first celebrated. The first ‘Empire Day’ took place on 24th May 1902, the Queen’s birthday. Although not officially recognised as an annual event until 1916, many schools across the British Empire were celebrating it before then. One New Zealand school journal from 1910 records: “This is the ‘Union Jack’; and now that Empire Day has come round once more, you will hear its history. It is really a coloured picture from a history-book, telling of things that happened, long before you were born”’.

  28. Herbert Thornton on June 8th, 2008 3:38 am

    R.W. - No I didn’t realise that - thanks for drawing attention to it. It puts my poor effort to shame.

  29. Tancred on June 8th, 2008 8:20 am

    Liam Burn, Immigration Minister, has held forth on “Britishness Day”.

    Quote: “Immigration Minister Liam Byrne said bringing together immigrants and UK citizens to celebrate everything they like about the country would bolster community relations.”

    Oh, so its not for us, but to fix the broken multicultural mess that they have created.

    So why not call it “Immigrants Are Us Day”.

    Let’s hope they set one up.

    It will be poisoned by all the Bangra music, Muslim celebrations, West Indian and African carnivals.

    Gay parades and “anti-racist” concerts will top it off.

    Heterosexual white British will be excluded. Celebrations of our culture will be excluded, marginalised and/or ridiculed or called “exclusive”/”racist” and banned.

    We will all turn away in disgust as celebrations of St George are banned (again).

    This will blow up in their faces - again!

    They just don’t get it.

    Thank God the BNP does!

  30. apendragon on June 8th, 2008 6:07 pm

    Watch this and enjoy, before the miserable ping-pong ball brains of Brussels/Troughminster have it banned under Elf n’Safety:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpzEF0D2xfE

Feel free to leave a comment...

If you want a picture to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!
Please note. You can copy and paste the Youtube code directly into your comment - No need for links!

You must be logged in to post a comment.


. The British National Party Website: Leading the way in British Politics.

1st: The British National Party
2nd: The Conservatives
3rd: Labour
4th: The Liberal Democrats
5th: UKIP